Will Dollar Rally Last Beyond Fed Minutes?

 | Feb 21, 2018 09:19

Market Overview

The US dollar has been rebounding in recent sessions. The big question is whether this is a sustainable recovery, or just a case of short covering that is likely to flounder once more as the bigger macro trends begin to re-assert? The chances are that the latter is going to be the case as the market remains concerned over the increasing burden of the ballooning US twin deficit. Market fears over rising inflation are clear with the market increasingly pricing in three rate hikes by the Fed this year. The US 2 year yield spiked higher yesterday on a $28bn auction of 2 year notes, but the focus now will be on the Fed minutes tonight. Can the dollar rally last? Any hints of heightened concerns of the members over the implications of increasing inflation trends will impact on longer dated yields and could be seen again as an open door for volatility to return. Sentiment is more cautious today after Wall Street corrected back last night, but could the Fed minutes be a game changer tonight?

Wall Street closed lower with the S&P 500 -0.6% at 2716 whilst Asian markets mostly remain closed for the Lunar New Year but the Nikkei was +0.2% on reduced volumes. European markets are set to open marginally lower too. In forex, the recovery on the dollar continues, with a mild outperformance across the majors and the yen weakness being standout. In commodities the dollar strength is also weighing on gold which is $3 lower, whilst oil is around 1% weaker.

The early European session will be packed with the flash Eurozone PMIs which the regional data is at 0900GMT and is expected to show the Eurozone Flash Manufacturing PMI expected to dip to 59.2 (from 59.6), The Eurozone Flash Services PMI expected to dip slightly to 57.6 (from an upwardly revised 58.0) and the Eurozone Flash Composite PMI expected to be 58.5 (from 58.6). Focus for sterling traders will comes from the UK employment data at 0930GMT. The headline UK Unemployment is not expected to move from the 4.3% that it has been for the past four months, however the real moves will come from Average Weekly Earnings growth which is expected to remain at +2.4% ex-bonus however positive surprises will be strong for sterling. The US Existing Home Sales are at 1500GMT and are expected to improve to 5.60m (from 5.57m). The big focus for the US session though will come from the FOMC minutes for the January meeting. There was no rate hike this time around, but the outlook o the members over increasing signs of inflation and how this could impact monetary policy in the coming months will be key for yields and the dollar.

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Chart of the Day – GBP/AUD

Sterling trades will be in focus today as the markets focus on wages for both Australia and the UK. Technically there is a trend intact on Sterling/Aussie which continues to pull the market higher. The trend was creaking yesterday with an initial drop back, but the bulls reacted strongly to form a positive candle that has been followed by an upside breakout above last week’s high of 1.7807. Momentum indicators have been wavering in recent days but the bulls seem to be ready to grasp control again after a period of consolidation within the trend. A close above $1.7807 would suggest the bulls are ready to push on within the trend and re-open the key December/February highs of 1.7995. The hourly chart shows adecivive move above 1.7807 today would be a breakout from a 230 pip ranging configuration, and imply a test of the key highs. Initial support is 1.7680/1.7750 with key support at 1.7570.